7 A.2d 647 | Conn. | 1939
In this action the plaintiff claimed to recover as damages wages lost to him by reason of the death of his minor son, alleged to have been killed by the negligence and recklessness of the defendants in operating an automobile which ran into him. A demurrer to the complaint based upon the ground that it stated no cause of action was sustained and from the judgment entered upon the plaintiff's failure to plead over he has appealed.
We have recognized it as a rule of the common law generally applicable that no action lies for damages resulting from the death of a human being. Murphy v. New York New Haven R. Co.,
The rule has, by most courts having occasion to consider the question apart from statutes recognizing a right of action, been applied where a parent has sought to recover wages lost by reason of the wrongful death of a minor son or a husband, to recover for the loss of consortium resulting from the death of his wife, and to other like situations. Panama R. Co. v. Rock,
We have not had occasion to determine the precise question now before us. It was, however, presented to the Superior Court in Kowalsky v. Leonard,
"The only doubt that such is the law of this state arises by reason of the case of Cross v. Guthery, 2 Root 90. In that case a husband was suing for loss of consortium resulting from the death of his wife caused by *638 malpractice. The verdict had been for the plaintiff and a motion for arrest of judgment had been made on the ground that the offense charged was a felony and the private injury was merged in the public offense. That contention of course was one of the reasons upon which the common-law rule forbidding recovery for wrongful death was based. The court in deciding the case and upholding the verdict said simply that the rule contended for `is applicable in England only to capital crimes where from necessity the offender must go unpunished or the injured go unredressed.'
"The doubt raised by that case seems to be definitely dispersed, however, by the case of Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. New York New Haven R. Co.,
"The reason for the common-law rule against recovery for wrongful death was not only that the private injury was merged into the public offense. It was rather because it was offensive to common sensibilities to try to compensate with money for the death of a human being and because it would be an impossible task to attempt to compensate relatives, creditors and everyone else who was injured by the death. It would seem clear, therefore, that we should accept as the stating of the law of this state the later and more fully reasoned opinion in Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. New York New Haven R. Co. rather than *639 the earlier and briefly stated dogmatic opinion in Cross v. Guthery."
We concur in the reasoning of that opinion, adding this: In Mobile Life Ins. Co. v. Brame,
The plaintiff relies on the case of Capozzi v. Waterbury,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.